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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Marburg Erupts Inside Health Ministry


The Ministry of Health has been thrown into panic after it emerged some of its own are suspected to have contracted the deadly ebola-like Marburg virus, Red Pepper can authoritatively report. Sheila Ndyanabangi, the clinical officer in the ministry is reported to be one of the 29 contacts the ministry has quarantined and for that reason she has been asked to go on forced leave for fear of spreading the disease to other workers.
This comes after one of Ndyanabangi’s unidentified relatives visited her from Kabale recently. The relative developed signs of Marburg, and luckily, as a senior medic, she was able to tell that something unusual was happening to the former.
The patient was rushed to Mulago for treatment and when her ‘superiors learnt of the shocking incident’ she was forced to stay home until she can be passed as free of the virus. An insider in her home who preferred anonymity told our reporter.
Red Pepper confirmed this development yesterday when she failed to turn up for the psychiatric conference she was expected to chair and present a paper. Instead she forwarded her written apologies through a workmate who represented her. The message reads in part; “First of all I begin by extending my sincere apologies, I was unable to chair this conference because a sick relative having Marburg visited me. And in turn I have been ‘forced’ to stay home until I am declared Marburg-free.”
The Ministry publicist Lukiah Nakamatte confirmed the news when we contacted her last night. “Yes Dr. Sheila is among the 29 contacts that are being monitored, we have taken her blood samples and we are waiting for the results,” Lukiah exclusively revealed.
However, she denied claims by Ndyanabangi that she was forced to stay home as written. “She was not forced to stay home but rather put under close watch,” Lukiah stated. The news confirms our earlier story that the deadly Marburg has hit Kampala city.
The country has been living in fear following the outbreak of Marburg Fever two weeks ago in the south western district of Kabale and has since claimed six lives. http://www.redpepper.co.ug/?p=1124

New Marburg case reported in Ibanda


Sunday, October 28  2012 at  01:00
The deadly Marburg virus has claimed two more lives, raising the death toll to seven and scaling up the infected areas.
Lydia Rusanyuka, 50, the mother to the former Kabale Regional Referral Hospital mortuary attendant, Mr Jason Tumukunde, succumbed to the disease in less than six hours after she tested positive. Another person was confirmed dead in Ibanda District, medical officials said.
The Kabale District Health Officer, Dr Patrick Tusiime, told this newspaper yesterday that Rusanyuka, a resident of Bukora Village Kitumba Sub-county, died in the isolation centre at Rushoroza Health Centre III shortly after midnight.
“A total of cumulative Marburg virus cases both probable and confirmed in Kabale District is now 14, the cumulative specimens collected so far are 14, the total number of admissions at the isolation centre is seven and the total number of people that got into close contact with the Marburg virus victims is now 198. The situation is becoming complicated,” Dr Tusiime said.
Marburg experts currently in Kabale have released a report indicating that a new Marburg case has been confirmed in Ibanda.
New Marburg case in Ibanda
“The Ibanda case is of a 32-year-old woman, resident of Sigiria Village, Kihani Parish in Kinkye Sub-county. She was admitted at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital on October 19 and died five days later after having miscarriage. The specimens were collected from her body and they tested Marburg positive and a supervised burial was conducted. Seven people that got in close contact with the deceased have been listed and are being followed up,” the report issued by Dr Tusiime and the Marburg epidemic experts, reads in part.
One of the Marburg victims, Mr Obed Tutegyerize, was discharged after specimens collected from him tested negative, six days after he was admitted at the isolation centre.
“Tutegyerize lost his two brothers, a sister and a mother to Marburg virus.
The specimens from him tested Marburg positive after he had escaped to Rukungiri for spiritual healing. The Marburg virus experts now camped in Kabale traced him and was put in the isolation centre. Specimens were again taken from him and on October 26 and tested negative and was discharged,” Dr Tusiime said.  http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/New+Marburg+case+reported+in+Ibanda/-/688334/1604776/-/jni7ajz/-/index.html

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Marburg Feared In Kampala


Deadly ‘unprecedented’ Marburg virus is likely to hit Kampala city center. The shocking news was unveiled by the Minister of Health, Christine Ondoa at Uganda Media Center.
Though she seemed not want to raise alarm, the statistics she gave were very clear that the fatal contagion is swimming in the ‘air’ of our dusty streets.
Ondoa said that so far six people have been succumbed to the disease with four testing positive. The health experts are monitoring 196 contacts (patients) in Rukungiri, Kabale, Ibanda and Kampala districts, plus one put under isolation in a  facility in Kabale and another in Mulago.
She said that 29 people including relatives of the affected and health workers are under surveillance here in Kampala while their blood samples taken to Entebbe Research Center for laboratory tests.
When Red Pepper asked her how safe the city center, the polite Minister responded that she wouldn’t want to arouse fears because the Ugandans not recovered from the ‘Ebola tragedy’.
Foreign Experts Fly In
A team of health experts from Center for Disease Control (CDC) based in Atlanta USA will jet in to back up the local expertise on bringing the tragedy to an end.  http://www.redpepper.co.ug/?p=1094

Uganda: Marburg - Kabale Bans All Public Gatherings



BY EDWARD SSEKIKA, 24 OCTOBER 2012
In a bid to avert further spread of the deadly Marburg haemorrhagic fever in Kabale, authorities in the western Ugandan district have banned all public gatherings, including church crusades.
The ban takes immediate effect. Kabale district chairman, Patrick Besigye, told The Observer yesterday that since the virus has no treatment, the most effective way of fighting it is to control its spread.
Marburg haemorrhagic fever was confirmed in Rwabihondo village, Kitumba parish, in Kabale last week and has claimed five lives from one family in a space of one month.
"We have also suspended graduations at Kabale University and Independence day celebrations for the district," Besigye said.
Kabale University's graduation ceremony was scheduled for October 27, while the district's Independence day celebrations were due October 31. Besigye further revealed that pupils from families suspected to have Marburg virus have also been stopped from attending school.
"The schools and markets will keep operating until we assess the situation," he said, urging the public to respect the ban.
Dr Patrick Tusiime, the Kabale district health officer, urged the public to take precautionary measures as one of the best ways of guarding against the Marburg virus. Besigye said four Marburg patients, including a relative of the family where five people died, have been admitted at Rushoroza health centre III, which has been designated as an isolation unit.
"The families of the dead are being monitored from their respective homes," he said.
Health experts are also monitoring some 40 people suspected to have had contact with the five killed by the deadly virus. Kabale has put in place several committees to respond to the disease. They include the Marburg district task force, with smaller, manageable specialized committees: the case management committee, surveillance committee and logistics committee, among others.
"We meet every morning and plan for the day and also meet in the evening to evaluate," Besigye said.
Meanwhile, Dr Jane Aceng, the Director General of Health Services, in a statement issued on Monday, said health experts in Mulago hospital are still monitoring a woman who tested positive for the Marburg virus. The woman is related to the five people who succumbed to the disease in Kabale and is in a stable condition in the isolation room at Mulago hospital. http://allafrica.com/stories/201210251188.html

Add two provinces appear PRRS in pigs



Thursday 17:12 10.25.2012
(HNMO) - 25-10, Department of Animal Health (Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development), said last PRRS in pigs appeared in two provinces: Khanh Hoa and the Pacific, bringing the total number of the local epidemic 5 provinces.
Accordingly, in Thai Binh province, on the last 18-10, PRRS has occurred on the North Sea in the commune, Tien Hai district, more than 60 infected pigs total herd of 225. At the same time, Khanh Hoa Province People's Committee has decided to publish the reproductive and respiratory disorders in pigs in the city of Nha Trang. Earlier, blue ear disease in pigs occurred in the city of Nha Trang and Ninh Hoa town, with the total number of pigs than 560 children, including 35 deaths. 

According to the Department of Animal Health, 12 -10 recently, avian influenza has occurred in Do Luong commune, Dien Bien district, Dien Bien province, more than 1,100 children infected poultry, including more than 950 ducks, nearly 130 chickens. Test results are positive for the H5N1 flu virus.Department of Animal Health, in collaboration with local governments destroy all infected poultry, and implementation of preventive measures prescribed. Thus, at present, there are 3 provinces : Quang Ngai Peace and Dien Bien avian less than 21 days; 5: Dak Lak, Quang Nam, Phu Yen, Khanh Hoa and the Pacific PRRS in pigs less than 21 days.  http://hanoimoi.com.vn/Tin-tuc/Doi-song/563669/them-2-tinh-xuat-hien-dich-tai-xanh-tren-lon

These Are The Airports Most Likely To Start A Pandemic


Jennifer Welsh | Oct. 24, 2012, 11:32 AM

Deadly Marburg virus kills six in Uganda


Marburg virus hits Uganda. File photio

The number of people who have died from a Marburg virus outbreak that started in the south-west of Uganda and has now reached the capital has risen to six, the country's health ministry said Thursday.

The highly-infectious disease has spread to three districts - including the capital, Kampala - after it struck in early October in the south-western Kabale district.
Nearly 200 people believed to have been in contact with the Marburg victims have been placed under surveillance, Health Minister Christine Ondoa told reporters.
She said that 10 per cent of those under surveillance were in Kampala...

Marbug vids




Uganda: Conservationists Call for Ugandans to Stop Eating Chimps


BY HENRY WASSWA,
25 OCTOBER 2012


Albertine Rift Region — Conservationists struggling to protect the remaining population of Ugandan chimpanzees have raised concerns that people around wildlife reserves in the west of the country have taken to eating the primates.

"There is now an issue of eating bush meat. We did not think Ugandans were eating primate meat but we are starting to observe that monkeys and chimps are being eaten. This is scary. The threat to their survival has been growing bigger," according to Lily Ajarova who runs the Ngamba Chimpanzee Sanctuary, located on an island of the same name in Lake Victoria in the Albertine Rift region.

The sanctuary, which houses 48 primates rescued from human captivity, was set up with the help of the Jane Goodall Institute and is managed by the Chimpanzee Sanctuary and Wildlife Conservation Trust.

Decades ago, tens of thousands of chimpanzees roamed the thick tropical forests that then covered a vast tract of land in Uganda's Albertine Rift region. The area covers the western arm of the Great East African Rift Valley from north-western Uganda to the extreme southwest, along the border with the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

But according to the World Wildlife Fund, chimpanzees have already disappeared from four African countries, and are nearing extinction in many others largely due to deforestation and the hunting of the primates for bushmeat. Currently there are only an estimated 5,000 chimpanzees in Uganda, conservation officials say.

Most of the remaining chimpanzees in this country are protected in six main game and forest reserves in the Albertine Rift region, while others are trapped in forests owned by individuals.

Ajarova told IPS that although her team of conservationists had first noticed people eating primate meat in western Uganda two years ago, those engaging in the practice had mostly been immigrants or refugees from neighbouring DRC. It was rare for locals in this East African nation to eat primate meat, she said.

"There are many other parts of the world where primate meat is eaten but this had not been happening in Uganda. We began witnessing this over time. It has been developing slowly and we ourselves only got wind of it when we were in the field two years ago," she said, adding that it was now "an emerging problem."

The recent arrivals of immigrants from the DRC have created a shift in the population balance of the area and have had an effect on local culture, she said. In July the Minister for Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Refugees Musa Ecweru said that Uganda was struggling to feed the large number of Congolese fleeing the fighting in North Kivu Province in neighbouring DRC. There are an estimated 16,000 Congolese refugees in western Uganda.

"There are lots of Congolese refugees in the area and they may have influenced the local people to eat monkeys and chimpanzees," Ajarova said. "This has not been a part of Ugandan culture in the past, but now it is becoming an issue. We have found that the habit is now rife in the whole (western) region. It is rampant in almost all the villages we visit.

"We have from time to time seen villagers carrying carcasses of monkeys and, on occasion, chimps," Ajarova said.

Officials also believe that people have taken to eating primates because the Albertine Rift region is poverty-stricken and people mostly depend on forest resources for survival, as they cannot afford to purchase meat.


"People are desperate, they are poor as this is an underdeveloped region. They mostly depend on forest resources, including game meat, and this may have forced them to resort to eating primate meat," Ajarova said.

Experts are now worried that the new trend could lead to a possible outbreak of Ebola, a haemorrhagic fever that is often fatal, which is believed to be transferred to humans through contact with an infected animal.

"This is a serious problem. Any meat that is eaten has to pass through proper veterinary inspection, even if it is from farms. People eating primate meat run a risk of getting infected with zoonotic diseases, including Ebola," said Andrew Seguya, the executive director of the Uganda Wildlife Authority.

"There is no Ugandan tribe that traditionally eats primate meat, but there are many Congolese refugees in that area and the Congolese may have spread the habit to locals," he said.

"Ebola is spread through direct contact and it's thought that these primates are carriers of the disease and may transmit it to humans through other ways, including faecal matter. There is even a school of thought that AIDS might have been transmitted from primates," Seguya, a veterinary surgeon, told IPS.

The western district of Kibaale, in the Albertine Rift region, was hit by a suspected Ebola epidemic in July. Health officials are yet to confirm that it was an Ebola outbreak. But according to media reports 17 people died.

Meanwhile, Ajarova said efforts are being made to change people's attitudes towards eating primate meat through education programmes and the setting up of animal-rearing projects among villagers.

"We are telling people to stop eating primate meat, informing them that it is dangerous to their health as they will get diseases like Ebola. This is one of the key messages in our education programmes," she said.

"We also use FM radios to pass on conservation messages to the communities. These reach out to large numbers of people at one go," Ajarova said.http://allafrica.com/stories/2012102...html?viewall=1

PRESS STATEMENT ON THE UPDATE ON THE MARBURG OUTBREAK

October 25th 2012 

MINISTRY OF HEALTH 
P. O. BOX 7272, 
KAMPALA - UGANDA
PRESS STATEMENT ON THE UPDATE OF MARBURG OUTBREAK 

The Ministry of Health declared an outbreak of Marburg in Kabale district on October 19th 2012 after receiving laboratory results from the Uganda Virus Research Institute (UVRI) confirming that two family members had died of the highly infectious viral hemorrhagic fever. Three other members of the same family had earlier died of a strange disease in a period of one month. 
The death of these people prompted the District Health Office to undertake further investigations of this strange disease that had ravaged Kitumba parish in Kitumba sub-county, Kabale district. 
According to the reports, the patients presented with symptoms of diarrhoea, vomiting, fever, headache, dizziness and generalized convulsions. Initial samples of blood and cerebral spiral fluid taken from the sick people ruled out Malaria and Meningitis. The family then invited a cult leader, a retired Reverend from Rukungiri, district to visit their household and pray for the sick. 
The index case is believed to have been a member of a family in Rwabirondo village, Kitumba parish in Kitumba sub-county which occurred on 20th September 2012. After the death of the index case, two other people, a sister and mother reportedly got sick and died. 
This outbreak comes barely two weeks after the Ministry declared an end to another viral Hemorrhagic Fever (Ebola) on October 4th 2012. The last Marburg outbreak was witnessed in October 2007in Kamwenge district. 
Marburg is a highly infectious viral hemorrhagic fever which kills in a short time but can be prevented. Marburg is spread through direct contact with, body fluids like blood, saliva, vomitus, stool and urine of an infected person. 
A person suffering from Marburg presents with sudden onset of high fever with any of the following; headache, vomiting blood, joint and muscle pains and bleeding through the body openings, i.e. eyes (red eyes), nose, gums, ears, anus and the skin. 
How is Marburg Spread?
It is spread through;
• Direct contact with wounds, body fluids like blood, saliva, vomitus, droplets, stool and urine of a person suffering from Marburg. 
• Unsterilised injections, contaminated linen, beddings and clothes.
• Using skin piercing instruments that have been used by an infected person. 
• Direct physical handling of persons who have died of Marburg

Current Status (Update) 
The Ministry of Health has developed a response plan and budget for the Marburg control amounting to sh2.3b of which sh1.75 is for central level activities including Ministry of Health, six general hospitals and Kampala Capital City Authority. This will be majorly for case management, surveillance, research and social mobilisation and procurement of protective gears. The district budget totals 651,047,576 and it covers case management, surveillance, research and social mobilisation. 

• Out of the six people who have died so far, only three were confirmed positive for Marburg. 

• Currently, there is only one confirmed case admitted in our isolation facility at Mulago National Referral Hospital. One convalescent case is detained at Rushoroza Health Center III while five suspect cases linked to the initial cases are admitted there awaiting blood results. Special teams of doctors and nurses have been assigned to attend to the patients in both the isolation facilities. The patient admitted at Mulago National Referral Hospital is from Kitumba sub-county and is a relative of the index case. 

• The Ministry of Health surveillance team has listed up a total of 196 contacts for close monitoring. These contacts are mainly in Kabale, Rukungiri and Ibanda districts while 29 are from Kampala. Those being monitored reportedly got into contact with either the dead or confirmed cases. The team continues to monitor them on a daily basis for possible signs and symptoms of this highly infectious disease until they have completed 10 days without showing any signs and symptoms. 

• A team of experts from the Ministry of Health, U.S Center for Disease Control and Prevention and World Health Organization have so far collected a total of 18 n samples from suspected cases for further investigations. The samples are being analyzed at the Uganda Virus Research Institute, Entebbe.

• The Ministry is conducting an orientation of local healthcare workers in Kabale Regional Referral Hospital and in the other peripheral health facilities on infection prevention and control, barrier nursing, surveillance and clinical case management. This is being done to build health workers’ capacity to handle such cases. 

• In Rushoroza Health Centre, a burial committee has been set up to manage burials of people suspected to have died of Marburg. The committee has been oriented on burial procedures and infection prevention and control. This is one of the control measures to curb the spread of the highly contiguous disease. The committee has so far supervised two burials.
• A team from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is expected in the country to undertake anthropological studies.
The Ministry of Health once again urges the public to take the following measures to avert the spread of the disease.
• Report immediately any suspected patient to a nearby health unit
• Avoid direct contact with body fluids of a person suspected to be suffering from Marburg by using protective materials like gloves and masks
• Persons who have died of Marburg must be handled with strong protective wear and buried immediately
• Avoid eating dead animals
• Avoid unnecessary public gathering especially in the affected district
• Burial of suspicious community deaths should be done under close supervision of well trained burial teams
• Report all suspicious deaths to a nearby health facility 


Once again the Ministry of Health calls upon the public to stay calm as all possible measures are being undertaken to control the situation. 

Hon. Dr. Christine Ondoa 
Minister of Health 

Marburg-6 dead 196 under surveillance

Marburg: Kampala safe, no travel restrictions
Publish Date: Oct 25, 2012


Marburg: Kampala safe, no travel restrictions
Medical team disperched to contain Marburg dressing up in Rushoroza health centre isolation ward in Kabale district.
By Taddeo Bwambale

Despite having one person admitted at Mulago Hospital with Marburg Haemorrhagic fever, health minister, Dr Christine Ondoa has assured Ugandans that the city is safe from the deadly virus. 

The World Health Organisation has also said it will not recommend travel restrictions within or outside the country at the moment, since the epidemic is under control.

A team of health experts from the US Centres for Disease Control (CDC) arrives in the country next week to carry out a study on wild animals in districts where suspected cases of the Marburg virus has been reported. 

Addressing journalists at the media centre Thursday, Ondoa said the CDC team would help to confirm the cause of the outbreak which was confirmed this month.

She warned that communities living near forest areas in western Uganda were susceptible to infection from the Marburg virus since they often come into contact with wild animals. 

The last Marburg outbreak in Uganda was reported in October 2007 in Kamwenge district, and studies linked the virus to bats and wild game in Imaramagambo forest.

Marburg fever is caused by a virus that easily spreads through direct contact with wounds, body fluids like blood, saliva, vomitus, stool and urine of an infected person.

A person suffering from Marburg presents symptoms such as high fever, vomiting blood, joint and muscle pains and bleeding through the body openings like eyes, nose, gums, ears, anus and the skin.

Ondoa confirmed that four of the six suspected cases had from suspected Marburg fever, while 196 people are under surveillance for possible contact with the infected in Kabale, Rukungiri, Ibanda and Kampala. 

One of the two confirmed Marburg victims is admitted at Mulago Hospital and in stable condition while another person is recovering at Rushoroza Health Centre III in Kabale district.

Dr Joachim Saweka, the WHO country representative said Uganda had one of the best surveillance teams in the region, but decried Government’s slow commitment to funding such interventions. 

The health ministry urgently needs sh2.3b to stem the epidemic, of which sh1.7b will be used to for surveillance, research and procurement of protective gear while sh650m is to be spent in the affected districts. http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/636785-marburg-kampala-safe-no-travel-restrictions.html

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Marburg Virus claims another victim; death toll at 6


Publish Date: Oct 25, 2012
One of the two people, who were admitted on Monday with signs of the deadly marburg fever, has died.

Edward Turyamureba, a 38-year-old resident of Kicumbi Cell, Kamuganguzi sub-county, succumbed to severe bleeding and vomiting on Tuesday evening.

He is the sixth person suspected to have died from the disease since it was reported earlier this month. He was laid to rest at a brief funeral yesterday.


Two people were admitted to an isolation centre at Rushoroza Health Centre III in Kabale district on Monday.

However, the Ministry of Health spokesperson, Rukia Nakamatte, yesterday said samples from the patients tested at the Uganda Virus Research Institute laboratory in Entebbe were negative.

Since the marburg virus was first reported in the country, only one person has been confirmed to have contracted it since the five suspected victims were buried before tests were carried out.

Meanwhile, Obed Ntegyereize, the first confirmed victim, is steadily recovering, after tests conducted on him on Tuesday turned out negative, health officials disclosed.

Ntegyereize is related to the five people who died from a mysterious disease linked to the marburg fever two weeks ago.

Dr. Patrick Tusiime, the Kabale district director of health services, said a surveillance team was monitoring the bereaved family to ascertain whether they are not infected.

Panic engulfed residents yesterday after one of the patients at Kabale Hospital, initially suspected to have marburg, passed away. However, Tusiime said the deceased succumbed to a stroke.

At Mulago Hospital, Sharon Twinomujuni, who tested positive for Marburg, is steadily improving. The hospital’s spokesperson, Enock Kusasira, said doctors had recommended a strict diet to aid her recovery.

He also said the hospital had not registered any new case of Marburg although the 26 people who came into contact with her were under surveillance. An additional 132 people are being monitored in Kabale district.

In Rukungiri district, health officials have put at least 21 families on surveillance in Nyamitoma village, Bikurungu parish, on suspicion that they came into contact with the first victim during prayers in a church. Authorities have since closed the church to prevent the spread of the virus.
http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/636762-marburg-virus-claims-another-victim-death-toll-at-6.html
Compiled by Isaac Nuwagaba, Goodluck Musinguzi, Caleb Bahikaho, Taddeo Bwambale and Viola Nabatanzi 

Italy-Citizens Urged to not Purchase and to not Use Novartis Influenza Vaccines


Hattip Ironore hopper

Urgent: Citizens Urged to not Purchase and to not Use Novartis Influenza Vaccines

Press Release n. 216 – October 24 2012



The Ministry of Health and Italian Agency for Drugs Safety (AIFA) ordered the immediate precautionary interdiction to use the following seasonal influenza vaccines, until further investigations will be done:
Agrippal;
Influpozzi sub-unit;
Influpozzi adjuvanted;
Fluad.
Concerned citizens are urged to not purchase and to not use the above vaccines until a new pronouncement by the Ministry of Health.

The interdicted vaccines have been made by Novartis company.

The AIFA, on the basis of the documentation presented by the company, ordered additional investigations on the quality and safety of such vaccines, because of the possible increased reactogenicity of them, or their ability to cause adverse reactions and side effects.

The Minister of Health, professor Renato Balduzzi, is closely following the situation. Further details will be available later this day.
-  http://www.salastampa.salute.gov.it/attualita/paDettaglioComunicati.jsp?id=3744

Mexico declares end to bird flu outbreak


Mexico declares end to bird flu outbreak that caused egg, chicken prices to soar
October 24, 2012

Mexico says an outbreak of the H7N3 bird flu virus in western Mexico has been "totally controlled" after 68 days without any reports of new cases.
President Felipe Calderon said Wednesday that more than 22 million hens had been slaughtered throughout the country since efforts to contain the outbreak were announced in July.
The outbreak caused price increases in chicken and egg products in Mexico. Calderon said the outbreak caused significant damage because of the outbreak.
The United States was among the countries that began exporting eggs to Mexico to help lower egg prices.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2012/10/24/mexico-declares-end-to-bird-flu-outbreak-that-caused-egg-chicken-prices-to-soar/#ixzz2AEif0jPI

Marburg Virus: UWA warns tourists


October 24  2012 at  18:15



The Uganda Wildlife Authority has issued a warning to tourists visiting national parks, especially those that are habitants for primates, to take precaution following an outbreak of the deadly Marburg virus in the country.
The authority’s acting executive director, Dr Andrew Seguya, told Daily Monitor on Tuesday that a multi-sectoral and multi-disciplinary National Taskforce has been put in place to, among other actions, mobilise and sensitise the public on precautionary measures like including wearing protective gowns, gloves and masks, and not to use skin piercing equipment used by Marburg infected persons.
He added that there have not been any cases of trip cancellation so far. He, however, added that some tourists might cancel trips if the disease is not contained.
The Ministry of Health last week declared an outbreak of the Marburg virus in Kabale district, with five people confirmed to have died of the disease.
Four more people are admitted at Rushoroza Health centre III while another 40 people are under surveillance.
The Marburg virus disease is reported to be transmitted through bodily fluids such as saliva and blood of an infected person, along with getting in touch with infected wild animals such as monkeys.
Mr Cuthbert Baguma, the executive director of the Uganda Tourism Board says there is no need to panic despite the fact that one of the cases occurred in a tourism attraction area.
Kabale district is on the way to Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and Mgahinga Gorilla National Park. Other attractions in the area include Ihimba Hot Springs and Lake Bunyonyi.
Mr Baguma further said that UTB together with other industry players is conducting an impact assessment to determine the effect it has had on tourism.
Hopes for a successful year were dampened in the tourism sector recently after tourists reportedly cancelled trips following an Ebola outbreak in Kibaale National Park.  http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Marburg+Virus++UWA+warns+tourists/-/688334/1594174/-/xgiiwa/-/index.html

Marburg: 132 now being monitored


Oct 24, 2012


Two more people have been admitted to an isolation centre at Rushoroza Health Centre III in Kabale district with signs of the deadly marburg fever. This brings the number of suspected cases to seven.

The number of people being monitored by World Health Organisation and the Ministry of Health has also risen from 34 to 132.


Dr. Patrick Tusiime, the Kabale district director of health services, yesterday said the number of suspected cases was rising.

At least two people are confirmed to have contracted the marburg virus since it was first reported in the Kabale district this month.

According to the health ministry, marburg has so far claimed one person, although at least five people have died after showing symptoms linked to the deadly virus.

The ministry spokesperson, Rukia Nakamatte, Tuesday said the samples of the suspected cases were taken to the Uganda Virus Research Institute laboratory in Entebbe for testing.

The two new cases reported on Monday are an 18-year-old female student from Kabale Secondary School, who was admitted at Kabale Regional Referral Hospital.

Her brother, a mortuary attendant at the hospital, died last week shortly after preparing the body of the first suspected marburg victim.

Another suspected case is the 54-year-old mother to the deceased, who developed severe abdominal pain, vomiting, chest pain and profuse sweating.

The first suspected case of marburg fever was reported two weeks ago after a family of five died from a mysterious disease.

The survivor, Obed Ntegyereize, fled Kiyonjo Parish in Kitumba sub-county in Kabale district to Rukungiri district, suspecting his relatives had been bewitched.

Ntegyereize, who tested positive for the virus, is being treated at Rushoroza Health Centre III.

The district leaders have temporarily banned public gatherings as a measure to stop further spread of the marburg virus.

Meanwhile, Sharon Twinomujuni, the woman who tested positive for Marburg and is a relative of the five people who died, is steadily improving. She is isolated at Mulago Hospital.

Appearing before the public accounts committee of Parliament yesterday, the permanent secretary in the health ministry, Dr Asuman Lukwago said the outbreak was under control  http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/6367...monitored.html

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

The Hunt for Ebola


The Hunt for Ebola

A CDC team races to Uganda just days after an outbreak of the killer virus to try to pinpoint exactly how it is transmitted to humans



Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/The-Hunt-for-Ebola-174938951.html#ixzz2AAuOcgFd